Ken Russell (1927-2011)


The great British director has died, aged 84; his most notorious film 'The Devils' will be released by the BFI this coming March.

In May this year, Ken Russell came to the first UK screening of one of his most notorious films, The Devils, in a newly restored form. He was frail and unable to make it down the steep steps of the Barbican’s main cinema screen, so sat at the back, but managed to participate in the on-stage Q&A thanks to a roving mike. Precise recall wasn’t always within his power, but a lot of the old fire was undimmed, as he recounted his battles with Warner Brothers over the cuts they demanded, and his pride at getting to see something close to the original assembly – thanks to the detective work of Mark Kermode, among others – with a sold-out audience.

Having caught only the tail end of the film on late-night Channel 4 in my teens, it was pretty thrilling to experience it fully and for the first time in the company of Russell himself. It’ll come to be seen as the defining film of a great hellraising career: one in which hell was sometimes almost literally raised, as at the castle of Lord Byron in his 1986 literary fantasia, Gothic.

Russell’s reputation for outlandishness – he was certainly one of the maddest imagists British cinema has ever spawned – should never be taken as the whole story, though. He could work within the establishment as well as outside it, and it’s interesting how many of his films launched themselves into mania from the springboard of seemingly respectable genres, such as literary adaptation (he returned committedly to DH Lawrence) or biopics of classical composers. An Oscar nominee for his direction of 1969’s Women in Love, which won Best Actress for Glenda Jackson, he even dipped his toe into Hollywood waters with the inimitably bonkers one-two of Altered States (1980) and Crimes of Passion (1984): a bit like slapping your host on one cheek, then the other, and wondering if you’ll be asked back.

There was mischief, insult and daring in Russell’s vision, and a playfulness that made him unique – his favourite game was to exploit the starchy norms of British prestige cinema and then abruptly throw an orgy, or blow loud raspberries in the direction of the church. In this sense he followed the rudely provocative tradition of Fellini or Buñuel , but fused that with an antic spirit of thoroughly British eccentricity. His idea of a costume drama was pretty much the antithesis of what Merchant-Ivory said it should be: one where everyone ran around giggling, things exploded and wigs went flying. Only with Mahler’s 5th playing instead of the Benny Hill theme tune. (Daily Telegraph)

Rent Ken Russell at Video Dogs - Women In Love, Lady Chatterley, The Rainbow, The Lair of the White Worm, Gothic, Mahler, Elgar, Delius, Lisztomania, Tommy, Altered States, Whore, and Billion Dollar Brain. Plus, Ken Russell at the BBC. Coming soon, 'The Boyfriend' & 'Music Lovers'

November, New Titles, 'Point Blank', 'George Harrison'


Samuel Pierret (Gilles Lellouche) is a nurse who saves the wrong guy -- a thief (Roschdy Zem) whose henchmen take Samuel's pregnant wife (Elena Anaya) hostage to force him to spring their boss from the hospital. A race through the subways and streets of Paris ensues, and the body count rises. Can Samuel evade the cops and the criminal underground and deliver his beloved to safety?

The experience of watching it evokes visions of the inevitable US refit (‘Anything for Her’ was remade by Paul Haggis as ‘The Next Three Days’). Instead, we have Gilles Lellouche (pictured) as Samuel, a brawny but benevolent trainee nurse whose wife is on the cusp of dropping a sprog. In a standard wrong time/wrong place set-up, Samuel is coerced into smuggling Roschdy Zem's wounded crim out of hospital, only to be roped into carrying out more depraved deeds when he finds out his wife has been taken hostage.

It’s hardly what you’d call high art, but Cavayé knows how to push buttons when it comes to straight-up, palm-sweating spectacle. It’s dumb and manipulative, such as the scene in which the bad guys almost dispose of the pregnant spouse by tossing her out of a window. But it’s also brisk and unpretentious, with no hint that we’re meant to take anything more away from this than a cheap but effective thrill.

Other New Titles in November

GEORGE HARRISON: LIVING IN THE MATERIAL WORLD
BEASTLY (2011)
HARLAN ELLISON: DREAMS WITH SHARP TEETH (2008)
NURSE JACKIE - SEASON ONE (2010)
NURSE JACKIE - SEASON TWO (2011)
MORGIANA (1972)
MICHAEL CACOYANNIS TRILOGY (1977)
POINT BLANK (2010)
CAVE OF FORGOTTEN DREAMS (2010)
AVANT-GARDE 3: EXPERIMENTAL CINEMA 1922-1954
BEN-HUR (1959) BLU-RAY
INTIMIDATION (1960) CRITERION
BLACK SUN (1964) CRITERION
I HATE BUT LOVE (1962) CRITERION
THIRST FOR LOVE (1966) CRITERION
WARPED ONES, THE (1960) CRITERION
TWIN PEAKS DEFINITIVE GOLD BOX EDITION
SCREAM 4 (2011)
SENNA (2011)
MY FORBIDDEN PAST (1951)
BLOOD ON THE MOON (1948)
BULLET TO BEIJING (1996)
MIDNIGHT IN ST PETERSBURG (1997)
MADAME ROSA (1977)
KILLING, THE(1957) CRITERION
SZINDBAD (1971)
13 ASSASSINS (2011)
CUL-DE-SAC (1966) CRITERION
FATHER (1966)
TAKING OFF (1971)
KILLING BONO (2011)
TREACLE JR. (2010)
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (2011)
POPE JOAN (2009)
HONEY 2 (2011)
WRECKED (2010)
RITE, THE (2011)
LITTLE WHITE LIES (2010)
SLITHER (1973)
MICKEY ONE (1965)
HICKEY AND BOGGS (1972)
BAL (2010)


October, New Titles, 'The films of Pierre Etaix'

Long overdue, the films of French comedian, Pierre Etaix, have finally come to DVD after a long legal wrangle over the rights to the films themselves was won by Etaix and his supporters.

Pierre Etaix built his career principally around comedy. In 1954, he moved from his native Roanne to Paris where he would make a living as an illustrator and eventually as a solo performer in cabaret and variety venues. He would also work as a circus clown in partnership with Nino Fabbri.

In 1954, he met Jacques Tati for whom he worked for 4 years as a draughtsman and gagman in the preparation ansd shooting of Tati's film, My Uncle, and as an assistant-director during the shooting, also playing a small, uncredited role in that film. In 1961, he performed his own “number” in Tati's music-hall production. Jour de Fête à I'Olympia.

In 1961, he became a filmmaker, realising two shorts - Rupture (FIPRESCI prize in Mannheim 1961) and Happy Birthday (Oscar in Hollywood 1962) - both co-written with Jean-Claude Carrière. Between 1962 and 1970, he realised five features: The Suitor (Prix LOUIS DELLUC 1963; the Comic Film Prize of the Moscow International Film Festival, 1963), Yoyo (Grand Prize - OCIC International Festival in Venice 1965), So Long as You're Healthy (Silver Siren at the International Festival of Sorrento), The Great Love (Grand Prize of French Cinema 1969) and The Land of Milk & Honey(Pays de cocagne, 1970).

The box set includes all five features, which are available separately at the store as individual feature disks.

October, New Titles, 'Jane Eyre', 'Bridesmaids', 'Win Win'


A mousy governess who softens the heart of her employer soon discovers that he's hiding a terrible secret. The latest adaptation of Charlotte Bronte's great novel about sexual harassment in the workplace. Jane's growing love for her employer, Mr Rochester, leads to some touching, but his inappropriate behaviour is punished with loss of sight. This like the last adaptation of the novel (BBC, 2006) was also filmed at Haddon Hall in Derbyshire, but for all the gloom and mood lacks the earlier film's sexual tension.

FORKS OVER KNIVES (2010)

A new documentary examines the profound claim that most, if not all of the so-called "diseases of affluence" that afflict us can be controlled, or even reversed, by rejecting our present menu of animal-based and processed foods.

OTHER NEW TITLES

THOR (2011)
SHADOWS OF PROGRESS (1951-1977)
THOR (2011) BLU-RAY
BRIDESMAIDS (2011)
BRIDESMAIDS (2011) BLU-RAY
JANE EYRE (2011) BLU-RAY
SCREAM 4 (2011)
LAST NIGHT (2010)
LION KING, THE (1994)
LION KING, THE (1994) BLU-RAY
WATER FOR ELEPHANTS (2011)
WATER FOR ELEPHANTS (2011) BLU-RAY
AMERICAN BREAKDOWN (2008)
WIN WIN (2011)
FORKS OVER KNIVES (2011)
EVERYTHING MUST GO (2010)
CONSPIRATOR, THE (2010)
POETRY (2010)

September, New titles, 'Snowtown', 'Insidious', 'Hesher'


Australia's worst serial killer, John Bunting, and the accomplices who fell under his spell are profiled in "Snowtown." An extremely bleak psychological horror-thriller with arty trimmings, the movie compels for a couple of reels before muddled plotting sets in and audiences are left with no one to connect with when the central character transforms from innocent bystander to participant in Bunting's crimes. Debut helmer Justin Kurzel guides a predominantly non-professional cast with distinction, but this descent into unremittingly depressing territory will require careful marketing and positive critical notices to attract viewers. (Variety)

INSIDIOUS
From the co-creators of ‘Saw’ (James Wan and Leigh Whannell, here director and writer) and the director of ‘Paranormal Activity’ (Oren Peli, producing) comes a project featuring nothing that was original, distinctive or scary about either earlier film. It starts like a haunted-house movie: spooked by something nasty in the loft of his parents’ new house, Dalton (Ty Simpkins) lapses into a coma. His mother, Renai (Rose Byrne), hires loopy medium Elise (Lin Shaye), who declares: ‘Your son is not in a coma. It’s not the house that’s haunted, it’s him.’ Renai’s sceptical husband (Patrick Wilson) is equally unimpressed when Elise calls in a pair of bickering, nerdy ghostbusters (Angus Sampson and Whannell), who arrive with tons of Heath Robinson gear. Suddenly, we swerve into a preposterous supernatural mystery – seemingly grabbed from the waste baskets of M Night Shyamalan and Sam Raimi – as Dalton is besieged by evil spirits and the medium spouts half-baked guff about astral planes. Not so much insidious as inexcusable. (Time Out Film)

HESHER
Loud music. Pornography. Burning shit to the ground. These are a few of Hesher’s favorite things. And they are what Hesher brings into the lives of TJ and his father, Paul when he takes up residence in their garage uninvited. Grief-stricken by the loss of TJ’s mother in a car accident, Paul can’t muster the strength to evict the strange squatter, and soon the long-haired, tattooed Hesher becomes a fixture in the household. Like a force of nature, Hesher’s anarchy shakes the family out of their grief and helps them embrace life once more. (Wrekin Hill Entertainment)

OTHER NEW STUFF THIS WEEK

HEARTBEATS (2010)
PROSTITUTE (1980)
MAMMUTH (2010)
LOST THING, THE (2011)
4.3.2.1 (2011)
CAIRO TIME (2011)
PATTON (1970)
STRANGE WORLD OF GURNEY SLADE, THE (2011)
JOANNA (1968)
PINTER'S PROGRESS & THE HOMECOMING (2010)
WARD, THE (2010)
TAKE ME HOME TONIGHT (2011)
CEREMONY (2010)
SOMETHING UNKNOWN (2009)
BURKE AND HARE (2010)

September, New Titles, 'Valhalla Rising', 'Super', 'Enter The Void'


A brutal, mesmerising film from Dane Nicolas Winding Refn (‘Pusher’, ‘Bronson’), dominated by Mads Mikkelsen as a mute fighter, whose journey from twelfth-century Scotland to a strange New World is an odyssey of self-realisation. Enslaved by a pagan Scottish clan chieftain, the nameless warrior is chained and forced to fight to the death in hand-to-hand bouts staged for amusement and betting. Escaping with the help of a young boy, who names him One-Eye, the warrior learns to use weapons and joins a band of Vikings, but these are Christian converts bound for Jerusalem to reclaim the city for their faith. Their ship, however, is enveloped by a mysterious mist, which finally lifts to reveal an unknown land. Lost, hungry and under attack from the natives, the Viking converts lose their faith and lose their minds, turning on one another – but the enigmatic One-Eye discovers his destiny and embraces his essential self.

There are shades here of Terrence Malick’s elemental feel for landscape, the doomed colonial enterprise of Werner Herzog’s ‘Aguirre, Wrath of God’ and Vincent Ward’s visionary ‘The Navigator: A Medieval Odyssey’, yet Refn makes this hypnotic, dreamlike film entirely his own.

Other New Stuff This Week

SUPER (2011)
VALHALLA RISING (2009)
POTICHE (2010)
DIARY OF A WIMPY KID 2: RODRICK RULES (2011)
ENTER THE VOID (2009)
HOLY WATER (2009)
MIDDLE MEN (2009)
MAD BASTARDS (2011)
MISFITS, THE (2011) SEASON 1 + 2
MAMMUTH (2010)
SOURCE CODE Blu-ray
Criterion CUL-DE-SAC
Criterion SECRET SUNSHINE

August, New Titles, 'Meek's Cutoff', 'Source Code', 'Battle Los Angeles'


Kelly Reichardt's glorious slow-burn western, which had its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival, is finally on DVD.

Two equally cool, contemplative and plot-neutral films – ‘Meek’s Cutoff’ and Sofia Coppola’s ‘Somewhere’ – competed for the Golden Lion. One was universally lauded and touted as the surefire winner. The other was dismissed as shallow, self-regarding and meaningless. And the wrong film won.

The sheer gulf of quality and intention between these two superficially similar films couldn’t be wider. The ‘cinema of nothing’ that both Reichardt and Coppola practice may be currently in vogue, but their approaches to it differ wildly: where Coppola uses the camera to reflect her own celebrity-centric interests, Reichardt’s gaze is firmly fixed on the outside world, and particularly on those poor souls who have lost their place within it.

‘Meek’s Cutoff’ is a western, but it’s like no horse opera you’ve ever seen. Michelle Williams plays Emily, one of a small band of settlers wagon-training west, keeping their eyes peeled for Indian raiders. But with supplies dwindling and tough-talking guide Meek (Bruce Greenwood) looking increasingly out of his depth, the group reluctantly turn to a captured Cayuse warrior (Rod Rondeaux) for guidance.

OTHER NEW STUFF THIS WEEK

PAUL (2011) BLU-RAY
PAUL (2011)
SUCKER PUNCH (2011) BLU-RAY
SUCKER PUNCH (2011)
SOURCE CODE (2011) BLU-RAY
SOURCE CODE (2011)
SOURCE CODE (2011) BLU-RAY
SOURCE CODE (2011)
UP PERISCOPE! (1959)
YOUR HIGHNESS (2011)
BATTLE: LOS ANGELES (2011) BLU-RAY
MEEK'S CUTOFF (2011)
LOU (2011)
PLEASURE GIRLS, THE (1965)
PLEASURE GIRLS, THE
BATTLE: LOS ANGELES (2011)
REEF, THE (2010)
HEDGEHOG, THE (2009)
SCARFACE (1983) BLU-RAY
A CAT IN PARIS (2010)
EXTRAORDINARY ADVENTURES OF ADELE BLAC-SEC (2010)
HOUSEMAID, THE (2010)
TOMBSTONE (1993)
AMADEUS (1984) BLU-RAY
BOURNE IDENTITY, THE (2002) BLU-RAY
BOURNE SUPREMACY, THE (2004)
BOURNE ULTIMATUM. THE (2007)
ALIEN (1979) BLU-RAY
ALIENS (1986) BLU-RAY
ALIEN 3 (1992) BLU-RAY
ALIEN RESURRECTION (1997) BLU-RAY
MAKING THE ALIEN ANTHOLOGY (2010)
MUSIC ROOM, THE (1958) CRITERION